52 per cent of Delhi lives in slums without basic services

December 17, 2009 05:54 pm | Updated November 17, 2021 07:03 am IST - New Delhi:

A file picture of Deputy Commissioner of Police (Licensing), Amod Kanth, addressing a press conference on Uphaar Cinema fire tragedy, in New Delhi. (He is now Chairman, DCPCR)Photo: Shiv Kumar Pushpakar.

A file picture of Deputy Commissioner of Police (Licensing), Amod Kanth, addressing a press conference on Uphaar Cinema fire tragedy, in New Delhi. (He is now Chairman, DCPCR)Photo: Shiv Kumar Pushpakar.

More than half of Delhi’s population lives in urban slums with inadequate provision of basic services, a study released here on Thursday said.

According to the study, titled “A situational analysis of the young child in India”, 52 percent of Delhi’s population resides in urban slums.

The survey, conducted in six slums in Delhi by Forces, a voluntary organisation working on child care services in India, shows that in comparison to Delhi’s infant mortality rate (IMR) of 40, the IMR in slums is higher at 54 for every 1,000 live births.

The immunisation level in the slums covers a dismal 34 percent of the population and because of the negligence of civic authorities in providing safe drinking water and sanitation, there is a high incidence of diseases such as diarrhoea (75 percent) and anaemia (63 percent).

“The nutritional status of the urban poor in Delhi is a matter of concern. Delhi has 35.4 percent stunted, 15.5 percent wasted and 33.1 percent underweight children under the age of three despite being a state with the second highest per capita income in India,” the report said.

The report goes on to say that 31 percent of Delhi’s slum-dwellers has no sanitation facilities and no underground sewage system. On the plight of construction workers, the report says that 67 percent children and 69 percent women construction workers are undernourished.

The report suggested: “The focus on quality health services has to be accompanied by a clear policy of land allocation for health services in Delhi’s master plan. The current allocation shows a decreased allocation of space for primary health centres in urban poor settlements”.

Amod Kanth, chairman of the Delhi Commission for Protection of Child Rights (DCPCR) who was present at the report’s release at the India International Centre, said that more focus should be given to increasing the number of service providers.

“We need more skilled man power to handle our health services. That is key to proper implementation of the health services to the people,” he said.

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